|
|  |
Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > University Groups > Arts & Sciences >

East Asian Studies

| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
Showing Stories 1 through 8 of 8.
- Show Home
|
 |
A tale of two artists
 A Challenge to Democracy explores legacy of Japanese internment camps

Sept. 17,
2009 --
 |
| Ansel Adams, Smiling Girl (Oriental Type), 1943 |
In the 1930s, the photographer Ansel Adams struck up a friendship with California painter Chiura Obata. Yet the arrival of World War II would set these two celebrated artists on radically divergent paths — paths that would, in very different ways, lead both to the now-infamous "war relocation centers" at which the U.S. government forcibly interred approximately 120,000 Japanese-Americans. Next month their sons, Michael Adams and Gyo Obata, will explore the impact of internment on their respective families in a public dialog at Washington University.

|
In Defense of Food
 Michael Pollan to receive Washington University Humanities Medal Nov. 20

Nov. 4,
2008 --
 |
| Alla Mailey |
| Michael Pollan |
Celebrated food writer Michael Pollan will receive the Washington University Humanities Medal as part of "Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors," the university's seventh annual faculty book colloquium. The biannual award is given to a distinguished scholar, writer or artist whose career merits special recognition for excellence and courage.

|
Tale of Genji
 Campus celebrates 1000th anniversary of 'world's first novel,' April 18

April 4,
2008 --
One mark of a great novel, it's been said, is its ability to stand the "test of time" — to remain captivating to readers from generation to generation. Washington University will honor such a novel on April 18 with two campus events celebrating the 1,000th anniversary of the Tale of Genji, a central pillar of the Japanese literary canon often hailed as the world's first novel.

|
Asian Studies
 WUSTL hosts Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs, Oct. 19-21

Oct. 1,
2007 -- Marxism in China, taboo images in Tibet and war, sex work and memory in 20th century Japan will be among topics discussed as Washington University welcomes the 56th Annual Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs (MCAA) to St. Louis, Oct, 19-21. Program includes pre-conference workshop for K-12 teachers on Oct. 13

|
Sisterhood in the spotlight
 Film explores the Japanese Women's Liberation Movement, which began in the 1970's and continues today

Feb. 17,
2006 --
"30 Years of Sisterhood," a documentary film on the 1970s genesis of Japan's women's liberation movement, will be in the campus spotlight Feb. 28 as Washington University hosts a group of Japanese activists, filmmakers and scholars now touring the nation to promote the project. Plans call for a special screening of the film at 3 p.m. Feb. 28 in Room 201, Crow Hall, followed by a panel discussion and reception. Sponsored by the Visiting East Asian Professionals (VEAP) program and the Women and Gender Studies program, both in Arts & Sciences.

|
Uhan Shii
 Taiwanese narrative opera group visits campus, Sept. 18-26

Aug. 31,
2005 --
 |
| Uhan Shii, an award-winning Taiwanese theatre group, will visit campus Sept. 18-26. |
Uhan Shii, an award-winning Taiwanese theatre group, will visit campus Sept. 18-26 and offer a public performance of the narrative opera "My Journey" at the Saint Louis Art Museum auditorium at 7 p.m. Sept. 23.

|
Mitts across the Pacific
 Baseball in Japan and United States is topic of public forum, April 16

April 8,
2004 --
"Mitts Across the Pacific: Baseball in Japan and the United States" is the topic of a panel discussion with owners of the St. Louis Cardinals and the Orix Bluewaves of Japan at 2 p.m. April 16 in the Moot Courtroom, Anheuser-Busch Hall. Free and open to the public, the forum features Bluewaves owner Yoshihiko Miyauchi; Frederick O. Hanser, vice chairman of the St. Louis Cardinals; and Timothy Hanser, vice president of community outreach, Cardinals Care. They will discuss the use of performance-enhancing drugs, the internationalization of baseball, new stadiums, salary caps, parity between teams and the future of baseball in Japan and the United States.

|
An ancient art
 Master Japanese carpenter works with architecture students to create traditioal bench for Butterfly Garden; installation Oct. 11

Sept. 29,
2003 -- Master carpenter Tamotsu Edo of Awajishima, Japan, will work with students from the Washington University School of Architecture to construct and install a traditional Japanese teahouse waiting bench, or koshikake machiai, in the university's Elizabeth Danforth Butterfly Garden.

|
Showing Stories 1 through 8 of 8.
- Show Home
|
 |
|
|  |
|